string band

Charlie Poole: Mountain Reel

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The history of American music is strewn with songwriters whose writing influenced the future of whatever genre they worked in. And while those contributions shouldn’t be made to seem slight under any circumstances, they way in which some of these folks lived has become equally important. Everyone knows Leadbelly did time. Son House did as well. But more over, folks know stuff like Hank Williams died in the back of a car being chauffeured to a gig – he was most likely half in the bag at the time. But before Williams hit the bottle, Charlie Poole and his groups sung about gettin’ loaded and have a roe on occasion. Read more

Mississippi Sheiks: Rural Abandon

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SheikSheikJust recording 70 sides over a career won’t necessarily guarantee a performer the ability to be recalled a few decades on. If one of those tracks, though, is “Sittin’ on Top of the World,” you’d get your deference. The Mississippi Sheiks, who penned and recorded that track in the ‘30s, were one of the early familial dynasties in recorded music. Using the moniker Carter, but actually being named Chatmon, the family’s figurehead, Ezell, was the uncle of Charlie Patton and was a popular performer during the waning days of slavery. His sons, any combination of Lonnie, Bo and Sam along with Walter Vinson, comprised the shifting line up of the Mississippi Sheiks. Read more

Milk 'em: The McGee Brothers

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The McGee BrothersThe McGee BrothersThe lineage of bluegrass or American music in a broad sense is debatable for a variety of reasons. Each ethnic group, with its own unique cultural trappings has some perception of how it has influenced the greater culture, arts and music. Of course, no one perspective is wholly right. But it can be said that African culture has effected subsequent artistic movements in this country. After all, even the banjo comes from the African continent. Read more

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